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THE SEEING EYE RELEASES FIRST-EVER STATE-BY-STATE SERVICE DOG ACCESS REPORT CARD

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New “State of Access” Campaign Ranks All 50 States, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico on Rights and Protections for Service Dog Handlers

MORRISTOWN, N.J., May 12, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The Seeing Eye, the nation’s first and most recognized guide dog school, today released the State of Access Report Card, a first-of-its-kind, data-driven ranking of every U.S. state, Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico on how well they protect the rights of people who work with service dogs to travel independently and live without compromising their freedom. The report card grades each jurisdiction in five subjects, combining legal analysis, government transparency data, enforcement and real-world handler experiences. Their scores are then used to rank them from 1 to 52, offering a comprehensive public accounting of service dog access protections.

Rank

State

Cumulative Grade

1

California

A-

2

Alaska

A-

3

Colorado

B+

4

Pennsylvania

B+

5

Nebraska

B+

California earned the top ranking and an overall grade of A-. Only one other state, Alaska, earned an A grade. Approximately 30 percent of all jurisdictions received a D or F, meaning nearly one in three service dog handlers live in a state with critically inadequate protection.

“People who are blind deserve to move through the world independently and with confidence, and a Seeing Eye dog is a powerful partner in that goal,” said Karen Leies, President and CEO of The Seeing Eye. “However, the data we collected reveals serious and persistent gaps in protections not only for guide dog handlers, but for all types of service dog teams across the country. This report card is our call to greater public education and action.”

The Seeing Eye State of Access Report Card is designed to be a resource for everyone with a stake in service dog handlers’ rights. This includes handlers navigating their daily lives, advocates pushing for stronger protection, and lawmakers with the power to close the gaps this data reveals. This report establishes a baseline as the first comprehensive, state-by-state measure of service dog handlers’ rights, designed to be updated and built upon in the years ahead.

AN UPDATED TOOL FOR SELF-ADVOCACY

Alongside the report card launch, The Seeing Eye is spotlighting the release of its updated Advocacy App, which gives users instant mobile access to federal and state laws. With the most recent update, users can now look up the process for filing a civil rights complaint in their state. Whether you’re a handler, business owner, service provider, or policymaker, the app provides important information about your rights and responsibilities.

“We hope that the data presented in The Seeing Eye advocacy app, as well as the State of Access Report Card, provide a clear picture of where each state stands and a roadmap for progress,” Leies continued. “The Seeing Eye’s Advocacy and Government Relations team is standing by to assist lawmakers and community leaders with making positive changes in their communities.”

STATE OF ACCESS REPORT CARD: KEY FINDINGS

“It’s important to highlight that even in states that received the worst grades, the lived experience scores from service dog handlers who live there could still be quite high,” said Melissa Allman, Senior Specialist of Advocacy and Government Relations. Allman is an architect of the Seeing Eye advocacy app and a contributor to the State of Access report card. “This should be encouraging to those with service dogs, even if they live in a state with a poor grade. It tells us that strong communities, informed handlers, and engaged advocates can make a real difference, even where the law hasn’t caught up yet.”

Significant Gaps at the State Level

Just 14 jurisdictions earned a B grade or higher, meaning fewer than 1 in 4 service dog handlers live in a state with strong, comprehensive protections.

Approximately 30 percent of all ranked jurisdictions (16 of 52) received a D or F, signaling critically weak protection across a large swath of the country.

Five jurisdictions received a failing grade (Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, Puerto Rico and Wyoming) for lacking state-level complaint processes, public education initiatives, or meaningful legal protections beyond federal minimums.

Public awareness and outreach were among the lowest-performing areas, with fewer than a quarter of jurisdictions earning an A or B grade.

More than half (54 percent) of service dog handlers reported rideshare and taxi denials over a 12-month period.

Nearly 40 percent of service dog handlers reported that they had encountered access barriers in the last 12 months.

Bright Spots

Most states have established infrastructure for addressing civil rights complaints – 42 states and Washington, D.C. have a state-level process in place.

On the legal front, there is a foundation to build on as 37 states earned a C+ or better for the strength of their laws and protections beyond the federal minimum.

Lived experience had the most A grades (37 percent of jurisdictions) among the five scoring categories and did not always align with overall scores. Mississippi and Wyoming, for example, both received an A+ in lived experience despite earning an overall grade of F and ranking 51st and 48th nationally.

71 percent of service dog handlers rated their state as good or excellent when asked to rate their overall experiences with public places, transportation, and services respecting their legal rights.

When asked to describe the culture of their state with regards to the acceptance and understanding of their legal rights, 59 percent of service dog handlers felt generally positive, and just 5 percent reported feeling excluded.

Nearly 75 percent of service dog handlers reported interstate travel, demonstrating that access barriers aren’t keeping them home and signaling a clear demand for stronger, more consistent protections and enforcement.

HOW STATES WERE GRADED

Each state, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico were evaluated across five categories and ranked based on their total scores.

Strength and Scope of State-Level Laws: Does the state go beyond federal law to protect service dog handlers? Scoring assessed nine categories, including whether states criminalize access denials, have pedestrian safety laws, and have enacted service animal fraud statutes.Complaint and Enforcement Process: Can a service dog handler actually use their state’s complaint system to seek relief? Scoring assessed how state-level protections are addressed and whether the filing process is easy to find and initiate.Public Awareness and Outreach: Has the state proactively educated businesses and the public about guide dog access rights? Scoring recognizes states that publish materials, address service animal fraud, provide links to resources, and actively promote training opportunities.Public Data and Transparency: Does the state publish data on complaints and enforcement actions? Are service animals specifically addressed? Is the data current?Lived Experience: More than 522 service dog handlers from each of the 52 jurisdictions completed a survey on access barriers, quality of experience in their state, rights awareness, and the cultural climate toward service dog teams. Grades reflect normalized composite data adjusted for sample size.

WHERE TO FIND THE DATA

The full State of Access Report Card, including each state’s overall letter grade, national ranking, and grades across all five categories, is available at www.seeingeye.org/stateofaccess.

ABOUT THE SEEING EYE

Established in 1929, The Seeing Eye provides specially bred and trained dogs to guide people who are blind. Seeing Eye dog handlers experience greatly enhanced mobility and independence, allowing them to retain their active lifestyles. The Seeing Eye is a 501(c)(3) non-profit supported by contributions from individuals, corporations and foundations, bequests, and other planned gifts.

The Seeing Eye is a trademarked name and can only be used to describe the dogs bred and trained at the school’s facilities in Morristown, N.J. If you would like more information on The Seeing Eye, please visit the website at www.seeingeye.org, call 973-539-4425, or email info@seeingeye.org.

Note to editors: “Seeing Eye®” is a registered trademark. Dogs trained by other organizations are referred to as guide dogs. Preferred language: “people who are blind,” “people with vision loss,” “Seeing Eye® dog handlers.” Phrases to avoid: “the blind,” “suffers from blindness,” “visually challenged.”

Contact: Ronica Cleary
302-414-9977, Media@ClearyStrategies.com

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Agog Strengthens Field of Immersive Media for Good with $6.5M in Early Grants and New Open Call for Climate-Impact Projects

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New call for proposals offers up to $1M in grants to support creators and nonprofits using immersive media to drive climate action and civic engagement

LOS ANGELES, May 12, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Agog: The Immersive Media Institute, a philanthropic organization focused on extended reality (XR) for social good, announced today that it has distributed nearly $6.5 million in grants to date, supporting creators, nonprofits, and field-building efforts that use immersive media to deepen public understanding of urgent social and environmental challenges. Agog is now opening its support to a wider pool of creators through its first public open call, offering up to $1 million for climate-focused immersive storytelling and projects.

Since publicly launching in 2024, Agog has worked to strengthen the ecosystem for immersive storytelling by funding projects, supporting creator labs and development programs, partnering with nonprofits, and bringing together artists, technologists, and cultural leaders. The open call reflects a deepening of Agog’s investment in exploring how immersive media can bring climate stories to life in more immediate, experiential ways.

“After more than three decades working as a journalist focused on climate change, I believe immersive storytelling is a powerful way to help people connect with what’s happening now — and imagine and build what a better future could be,” said Chip Giller, co-founder and executive director of Agog and founder of climate news organization Grist. “Immersive media represents a step change in communications. These technologies put you in the story itself, allowing you to experience it viscerally as a participant. Using them, you can travel to Greenland to experience melting ice sheets, visit low-lying islands in the Pacific threatened by sea-level rise, or even embody a tree growing from a seed to a towering old growth. It’s wild — and the changes in these media are happening fast. We hope this open call encourages more people to learn about immersive media and put it to use in the fight for a livable climate.”

“Climate change is a challenge so immense that it can be hard to grasp, even as it affects every one of us,” said Wendy Schmidt, co-founder of Agog. “Immersive storytelling has the ability to bring the effects of climate change — whether it’s melting glaciers, raging storms, or disappearing coastlines — not only before our eyes but all around us, reaching all of our senses. As Agog deepens its focus on climate storytelling, we hope that this powerful technology can, by helping us all experience these changes, spur us to action for our communities and our planet.”

Agog’s grantmaking supports immersive impact storytelling across climate change, racial equity, Indigenous knowledge, and journalism, alongside broader ecosystem investments. Climate-focused projects include “Out of the Ashes,” a virtual reconstruction of communities impacted by the Los Angeles wildfires. Work in racial equity includes support for wider distribution of “The Book of Distance,” a critically acclaimed virtual reality (VR) documentary exploring memory, migration, and state-sanctioned racism. Agog has also invested in Indigenous-led storytelling through projects like “OurWorlds” and a funding initiative with the Indigenous Screen Office, supporting community-led narratives, language revitalization, and land-based knowledge. In journalism, Agog has supported efforts like the Experiential Journalism Lab at the Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley Journalism, training emerging reporters to develop immersive, experience-driven forms of storytelling grounded in rigorous reporting.

Beyond individual projects, Agog has invested in the infrastructure that allows this work to grow — from creator labs and residencies with partners like PHI, Black Public Media, and Electric South to incubators such as WORLDING and Reality Hack at MIT, in addition to wider distribution initiatives. Together, these efforts support projects from concept to audience engagement and impact.

“Immersive media has the power to have a generational impact on our society, the land, and humanity,” said idris brewster, founder of Agog grantee Kinfolk Tech. “Agog has recognized the power of and need for this technology, and its support has made this kind of storytelling possible for Kinfolk Tech and many other creators and organizations.”
 

A New Phase: Climate Futures + Immersive Media Open Call

Agog’s 2026 open call, Climate Futures + Immersive Media, supports projects that use immersive media to engage people more deeply in climate issues and expand pathways for participation and action.

The initiative invites proposals from XR creators and mission-driven organizations new to immersive media, with a focus on projects that move audiences from awareness to action. The review committee will consist of Agog leadership and climate and XR experts, including Myriam Achard, chief of new media partnerships and PR at PHI; Jerome Foster II, sustainability and social impact consultant; Anthony Leiserowitz, Ph.D., director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication; and Jacqueline Patterson, founder and executive director of The Chisholm Legacy Project.

Areas of interest for the open call include:

Climate storytelling and civic participationCommunity power and resilienceAccess, equity, and climate justicePlanetary connection and well-beingFuture-building and world design

The open call will support projects across a range of stages and formats, from early concept to more developed work. Agog is particularly interested in projects that use smart glasses, augmented reality, spatial sound, and mixed reality to help people experience climate challenges and solutions in more immediate, embodied ways. Agog will award grants in denominations ranging from $25,000 to $200,000. In addition to funding, selected projects may receive mentorship and opportunities for partnership and distribution.

Applications close June 12. agog.org/opencall2026/ 

Agog: The Immersive Media Institute

Agog: The Immersive Media Institute is a philanthropic organization founded by Chip Giller and Wendy Schmidt that is dedicated to helping creators and nonprofit leaders use extended reality — including virtual, augmented, and mixed reality — to imagine and build a more connected, just, and compassionate world. Agog operates as a field builder and creative partner, supporting immersive storytellers whose work addresses urgent social and environmental challenges.

CONTACT: Alex Capriotti
alex@agog.org

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/agog-strengthens-field-of-immersive-media-for-good-with-6-5m-in-early-grants-and-new-open-call-for-climate-impact-projects-302769688.html

SOURCE Agog: The Immersive Media Institute

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Seerist Caps Banner Q1 with Doubled New Customer Wins and 85% Growth in New Logo ARR

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AI-powered product advances fuel broad-based momentum across Commercial and International Government markets

RESTON, Va., May 12, 2026 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — Seerist, the AI-powered risk intelligence platform trusted by security and intelligence teams around the world, today reported strong first quarter 2026 results. New logo wins doubled year-over-year, and Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) from new logos surged 85% compared to the same period in 2025, reflecting the convergence of product innovation meeting market demand.

Our customers are operating at a level that simply wasn’t possible before, and the market is responding accordingly. — Alex Berry, Chief Executive Officer, Seerist

The breadth of the quarter’s performance was just as notable. Total company ARR grew 15% from Q1 2025, while Seerist’s Commercial and International Government markets, the two fastest-moving areas of the business, posted a combined 19% ARR increase from the prior year period. Net Expansion in those markets rose 15%, and Gross Retention improved by 5%, signaling that customers are not only renewing but deepening their reliance on Seerist.

“The AI capabilities we’ve built into the platform, automating workflows that used to consume analyst hours, are genuinely force-multiplying what our customers can accomplish. Security and intelligence teams are extending their reach without adding headcount, and the outcomes are speaking for themselves. This quarter’s numbers are a direct reflection of that.”

— Barry Saadatmand, Chief Revenue Officer, Seerist

At the core of this product evolution is AskAnna, Seerist’s AI intelligence assistant. Built to synthesize vast quantities of structured and unstructured data into clear, actionable outputs, AskAnna has emerged as one of the most significant drivers of platform adoption and expansion and is transforming the speed and scale at which customers can act on global risk.

“AskAnna now puts 50,000 analyst hours fused with millions of open source signals all at the fingertips of a query that generates actionable insights in seconds. This is a categorically different way of understanding and responding to risk. Our customers are operating at a level that simply wasn’t possible before, and the market is responding accordingly.”

— Alex Berry, Chief Executive Officer, Seerist

As Seerist heads into the second quarter, the company expects to sustain this trajectory through continued investment in its AI capabilities, expansion of its go-to-market reach, and the deepening of strategic partnerships across Commercial, Federal Government, and International Government sectors.

About Seerist

Seerist, Inc. enables global corporations, governments, and organizations to navigate a volatile and uncertain world by preparing them for potential events that could disrupt operations. Trusted by more than 400 organizations, including over 20% of the Fortune 100, and over 50 government agencies, Seerist combines cutting-edge artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML)—parsing millions of data points—with expert human analysis built on decades of insight. With 10 global offices and a strategic partnership with Control Risks, Seerist delivers the foresight and clarity needed to make rapid, strategic, and reliable decisions when it matters most. To learn more, visit www.seerist.com

Media Contact

Jen Dillon, Seerist, 1 1 800 674 8398 748, jen.dillon@seerist.com, www.seerist.com

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Replit Announces vibecon, its First Creative Conference where Code meets Culture in New York, June 17-18

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Oscar-winning filmmaker Spike Jonze, media artist Refik Anadol, advocate Reshma Saujani, AR creator Paige Piskin, digital artist GMUNK, Emmy-winning motion designer Gryun Kim, and the legendary Rhizome’s 7×7 among the names confirmed

FOSTER CITY, Calif., May 12, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Replit, the AI software creation platform used by more than 50 million people, today announced a first-of-its kind AI conference  where code, creativity and culture intersect. The event brings together artists, filmmakers, designers, founders, technologists and curious newcomers to a playground to explore code as the next creative medium.

Taking place June 17–18 at Canyon on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, the inaugural vibecon will bring together an eclectic group of pioneering creators turning software into apps, installations, films, tools, performances, visual systems and interactive experiences that would have been out of reach for most a year ago. For two days, vibecon will be alive with people who no longer draw a line between code and craft. The conference will feature live talks, interactive installations, hands-on workshops, art exhibits and performances designed to show what becomes possible when creators can move from idea to output without losing momentum.

Oscar-winning filmmaker Spike Jonze, the creative brain behind Her, Being John Malkovich, and iconic music videos for everyone from Beastie Boys to Björk. A boundary dissolving storyteller who’s spent decades making machines feel human and humans feel surreal. Spike will be in conversation with Replit CEO, Amjad Masad, on June 17.

Turkish-American media artist Refik Anadol, a pioneer at the intersection of AI, data and architecture, will also take the stage with Replit President and Head of AI Michele Catasta. Anadol is also the co-founder of Dataland, the world’s first museum dedicated to AI art, opening in Los Angeles.

“When we founded Replit 10 years ago, I wanted it to be the platform where creatives could build anything they wanted without learning to code,” said Haya Odeh, co-founder and head of design at Replit.  “This summer’s vibecon is the culmination of that idea we had so many years ago – a space where creativity meets code building moments that inspire you, leave you in awe, and make your imagination go wild. Code truly is the new Creative”

Jonze and Anadol are joined by a host of creators on stage and around the event including.

Reshma Saujani Founder of Girls Who Code and Moms First, executive producer of No Country for Mothers, and TIME’s Women of the Year 2026. Her TED talk “Teach girls bravery, not perfection” has 54 million views and her decade-long fight for women’s economic empowerment from childcare, to paid leave, to equal pay, has made her one of the defining activist voices of her generation.

Paige Piskin, one of today’s most prolific AR creators, who has generated more than 400 billion impressions through effects and campaigns for Netflix, Coldplay and major beauty brands. Named a “legend” by VICE and an artistic “master” by Meta, Piskin will talk about how AR has changed what audiences feel when they look at a screen.

GMUNK, digital artist and director, whose psychedelic and atmospheric work spans installations, music videos, title sequences, immersive film and the iconic Windows 10 wallpaper seen by billions of people, will take over the main stage for a talk on switching artistic media in pursuit of creative discomfort.

vibecon will also bring Rhizome’s 7×7 to the stage. The long-running art and technology series pairs artists and technologists to create new work together. It is also the program through which Kevin McCoy developed Quantum, widely regarded as the first NFT artwork.

Vibecon will also feature Lucas Gelfond, the software engineer and writer reimagining the full stack of storytelling at A24 Labs; Karyn Nakamura, the Tokyo-born, MIT-trained artist and engineer probing the hidden infrastructures of perception; Debit, the composer, producer and DJ whose research-driven records and site-specific works have reached the Whitney and the Venice Biennale; and Saarim Zaman, the Dhaka-raised creative technologist and co-founder of ITM, building at the edges of culture and code.

Beyond the stage, vibecon’s installations and workshops will immerse attendees into new worlds they never thought possible.Tigris Li, artist, creative technologist and co-founder of consumer electronics company LYCHEE, is curating a real-time perfume experience that turns memories and AI conversations into a bespoke fragrance on site. LA-born new media artist Nate Mohler, founder of Projekt Blank, will lead a workshop and installation blending AI, memory and urban landscape. Artist Kyle McDonald, who works across machine learning, computer vision and social technology, will debut a new interactive installation that invites attendees to get weird with code.

Focusing on craft, create and connect, the event will feature four distinct zones of engagement:

Main Stage: A main platform for high-velocity talks, keynotes, and performances.The Forum + The Lab: An intimate space for hands-on sessions, live demos, and deep-dive discussion.Installations: Across the entire floor, AI powered art exhibits available for viewing.Event Details Dates: June 17–18, 2026Time: June 17: 11:00 AM – 7pm PM + June 18 11:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Location:  Canyon, 145 Delancy St, NYCTickets: vibecon.ai.

For more information, contact press@replit.com

 

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